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Monday, May 1, 2017

Honoring Parents

I’m a new Ba’alat Teshuva learning to keep the Torah and
Mitzvot, but I’m struggling with how to keep the mitzvah of respecting my
parents. They want me to go to college and get a secular education, but I want
to go to Israel and learn in a Yeshiva for women. Every night at the dinner
table we fight about this issue, and sometimes I get so upset that I use bad
words and call them duped, narrow minded and ruthless. Then I feel terrible and
remember that I have a mitzvah to respect my parents and even fear them. Does
that imply that I have to do what they want and enroll in college?

Jenny Wise (name changed)

Dear Jenny,

Rebbetzin with her father in Denmark, April 2017

What you are going through is not easy. You are developing your own
identity separate from your parents who are not religious. You want to live
your own life, but your parents are adamant that you get a secular education so
you will be able to support yourself. You are torn in your desire to follow
your heart and soul to immerse yourself in Torah in the Holy Land, while
keeping the mitzvot of honoring and fearing your parents. Your discussions with
your parents have turned into unproductive confrontations where your temper
gets the better of you, and you later regret your disrespectful words. So how
can you live your own life and still respect your parents when they demand that
you obey them doing the opposite of your soul’s calling?

The Mitzvah to Obey Parents

Parashat Kedoshim teaches us the mitzvah to fear our parents,
which can be hard to relate to in our times when it is popular to love but not
fear and we are encouraged to do whatever we feel like.

“A person must fear his mother and father but keep my Shabbats, I
am Hashem Your G-d” (Vayikra 19:3).

What is the difference between “honoring” and “fearing” our
parents? Honoring includes: giving them to eat and drink, assisting them to
dress, helping them enter or leave a room or building i.e. picking them up and driving them back to
where they want to go, and in general to take care of their physical needs. On
the other hand, the mitzvah to fear one’s parents includes: not sitting or
standing in their place, and not contradicting their words (Babylonian
Talmud, Kedushin 31b). Not contradicting their words entails obeying our
parents if they tell us to do a particular action. Therefore, whenever possible
we should try to fulfill our parent’s request. However, if the parent will not
benefit directly, whereas the child will suffer some type of loss by obeying,
the child is exempt from complying with their request (Sefer Mora Horim
u’Chvodam 1:50). It is not clear whether this exemption applies to you,
since it is possible to say that your parents indeed will benefit from your
ability to gain the means to make your own livelihood and no longer depend on
their financial support.

Fear and Respect Parents Without
Infringing on Mitzvah Observance

So do you really have to give up your dream to learn Torah in
Israel in order to keep the mitzvah of fearing your parents? “…But you shall
keep my Shabbats…” – Scripture places the mitzvah of keeping the Shabbat
immediately after that of fearing one’s parents in order to suggest the
following: “Although I admonish you regarding the fear due to your parents, yet
if they bid you to desecrate the Shabbat do not listen to them. The same is the
case with any of the other mitzvot. This is evident, since Scripture adds, “I
am Hashem your (plural) G-d,”– both you and your parents are equally bound to
honor Me (Rashi, Vayikra 19:3).

The Mitzvah of Learning Torah in
Israel Overrides the Mitzvah to Obey Parents

From this we learn that a Jewish person must fear his Jewish
parents only as long as respecting them does not infringe on mitzvah
observance. For example, if your parents tell you to turn on a light for them
on Shabbat, you may not obey. Likewise, you are not obligated to honor your
parents by living outside of Israel in order to be geographically close to
them, since it is a mitzvah in the Torah for every Jew to live in Israel. Yishuv
HaAretz – Settling in the Land of Israel takes precedence over all
mitzvot, for it is the only mitzvah that overrides a rabbinic ruling relating
to the Shabbat. The Rabbis allow a Jew to purchase a home in Eretz
Yisrael on Shabbat, if necessary, even if this entails
violating the prohibition to tell a non-Jew to violate Shabbat on his
behalf (Babylonian Talmud,Gittin 8b
and Bava Kama 80b with Tosafot). Likewise, the
mitzvah of learning Torah outweighs all other mitzvot (Mishna Peah 1:1).
Therefore, although this goes against your parents’ wishes, the mitzvah of
learning Torah in Israel overrides the mitzvah to obey them.

Three Partners in Creation

Although you are exempt from complying with your parents’ desires
when doing so would disobey Hashem and His Torah, you still need to go about
your life in the most respectful way possible. It is of utmost importance to respect our parents in in every
possible way without transgressing the Torah. This is because the creation of a
child includes the partnership between three: Hashem and both of our parents.
Therefore, by disrespecting our parents we also disrespect Hashem, G-d forbid. Raising our voice and using
insulting words towards our parents could border to the prohibition of cursing
them, which is very serious, as it states in Parashat Kedoshim:

The reason that
anyone who cursed his father or his mother is liable for the death penalty is
connected to the beginning of the parasha commanding us to fear our
mother and his father. It states here,
that anyone who does not listen to My voice but curses his father or mother
shall die. We can understand this in light of the statement, “You shall
sanctify yourself and be holy for I am Hashem” (Vayikra 20:7), and “for
I am Hashem who sanctifies you” (Ibid. 8). For the honorable Hashem sanctifies
us, he is our father and redeemer, His Name is eternal. Therefore, the
blasphemer of any of the partners in his own creation is liable for the death
penalty (Ramban, Vayikra 20:9).

Speaking Respectfully to Our Parents

We need to work on
controlling ourselves and learn to speak in a respectful manner to our parents,
even when they press our buttons. In the cases when we are exempt from doing
their will, we still must try our hardest to avoid a confrontation with our
parents. Make an effort not to contradict their words, but rather express
yourself in the positive way. Thus, instead of saying, “There is no way I will
go to college…” you may say something like, “I really want to go to Yeshiva in
Israel for now, but it is likely I will go to college at a future time.” We are
indeed indebted to our parents for bringing us into this world and for the
struggles they had along the way. Denying this debt transgresses the will of G-d. Once we learn to
really respect our parents we can move on to recognizing Hashem’s greatness and
all he has done for us, bringing us into the world and fulfilling all our
needs. When we engage in active appreciation for our parents, we will eventually
realize how much physical, emotional, and spiritual support they have given us
throughout our lives. Thus, we must respect our parents where respect is
deserved (Based on Sefer HaChinuch 33:4).

Insights into the Jewish Months

Coming up at B'erot Bat Ayin

My Bio

Rebbetzin Chana Bracha Siegelbaum, a native of Denmark, is founder and director of Midreshet B'erot Bat Ayin: Holistic Torah Study for Women on the Land. She holds a Bachelor of Education in Bible and Jewish Philosophy from Michlala Jerusalem College for Women, and a Masters of Art in Jewish History from Touro College. Rebbetzin Chana Bracha creates curricula emphasizing women's spiritual empowerment through traditional Torah values.